Pubdate: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Warren Wall PEOPLE DON'T SELL DRUGS, PHONES SELL DRUGS So now Vancouver police are removing public pay phones on the Downtown Eastside because drug dealers use them. This is the same brilliant logic that brought us the gun registry. I can almost hear the arguments now. The first thing to remember is that people don't call drug dealers, phones do. Treating the causes of drug use is foolish; the answer is to control the phones. Those naysayers who insist druggies might still buy drugs using other means are just trying to cause trouble and be negative. Of course, it goes without saying that we should have a federal phone registry. By tracking all legal phones, it will help to solve crime when criminals use a phone to sell drugs. We're not sure how, but we're confident it's worth a billion dollars to find out. People with more than 10 phone lines at their business or home address are to be subject to searches without a warrant. If their phone licence expires, they will be expected to sell all phones immediately, or have them seized. Even if they are not using them. Then they should restrict all pay phones to only five calls. Program the change receptacle to take only five quarters. That limits the number of dealers who can be called, which will make us all safer. People who use their phones to put food on the table, like pizza-eating bachelors, might have some sort of excuse to own phones. However, even then they require only single-call units. Phones with high capacity batteries are pure evil, and have no place in our society. I have read those insane reports that suggest private citizens can reduce crime by calling the police when they see it, but that's just the phone lobby trying to promote their evil agenda. Everyone knows that in a civilized society only police and the military should have phones. Hey, if it saves just one life . . .. When will our our government and police forces learn the simple truth that you don't solve social problems such as crime, drugs and homelessness by banning inanimate objects and taking them away from law-abiding citizens? As a society, we will continue to be plagued by these and other problems until the powers that-be learn to address the roots of the problems instead. Warren Wall Vancouver - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake